Now opened for your inspection First Display of Mew Fall Goods On our counters for inspection Hew Ginghams, late shades in wool Serges; Fall Rice Ratines[most popular spring fabrics] Two lines of new novelty suitings 25c. New Plaids bright colors 25c. First show of the new wool Crepe de Chenesfor fall wear No better time to get the girls ready for schqoLI^eW^ Coat stiits soon to arrive. New shoes already here, and i , ' others arriving each week. - New Trunks, Handbags and Valises. Two specials in wardrobe trunks no other * ; .W . fc. ??' h "? trunk so good for school girls. - 3 s., A v y. '? LEONARD, SHAW AND DEANS Fall Shoes are here in all the new styles and leathers. If V.-," V? r 1 _ v ^ : ? . " '. "? ' ? ' ? , Tj' your summer shoes are getting thin we arerea^y for you. * The one .price. Cash Store The .Store that Satisfies star On The Farm and Be Your Own Boss. There U one thing we should like To urge very strongly In this issue, Mr. Farmer Boy, and tbfit Is that you stay on the farm whore you can be your own "Softs, Instead of going off to the' city to bo somebody's clerk or hired man?that is, unless you have some special marked and definite talent for some particular work. It Is true, of course, that the farmer, does not now get all the profit he ought to get?nor all he Is going to" get?but it is also true that the work ingman In the country fares better' than the workingman in town. Read all you can, study all you can, and prepare yourself to be a good far mer?a genuinely wide-awake, pro gressive farmer?and, you will, nine chances out of ten, fare far better than if you should go to town. As we see it, the farmers day Is com ing. The thought of the world is tur ned as never before to building up the country. The Government itself which was once interested in protect ing manufacturers, developing manu factures, and building up _ the towns, Is beginning to see the source ofall prosperity is the farm. But the one best Blgn is that the farmers them selves are getting aroused and study ing their privileges and rights. Al ready the awakening and organisa tion of the farmers have resulted In untold good, and you ought to resolve now that there shall be a farmer's organisation in your neighborhood as long as y3u live. "If you are 16. years old, Join the Farmers Union or what ever Ipther organization is nearest you, and take an active part In it. Speak to your father about It. Anitber thing which Insures better times for the Southern farmer Is this: Por a hundred years until very re cently we have had to compete with cheap lands farmers in the "West. That is to say, any farmer C0i5ld go out West and stake out a "homestead," and sell his crops without allowance for land values because his land-cost him nothing, or practically nothing. But all that is past. The cheap lands of the West have gone, and now when the Western farmer sells his "crops he must add $6 to $10 per acre an al lowance for rent or for interest on land values. And because of this fact crops slntplpy can't be sold aa chfeap-i ly m formerly. Then too, city populations have in tlons the whole world over, ana it is becoming more and more diflcult for the city people to get'enough moats and food stuffs. There are several million more people in the United States than there were five years ago, while there are several million fewer meat aitonls. This is an Indication that farm pproducts must go higher, especially livestock. One of the greatest of the world's students of rural problems declared recently that In the future labor on the farm 1b going to be better paid than labor in the towns, and we be lieve he is right. Stick, tq: the farm v?-The Progressive Farmer, - Severe Attack of Colle Cnr?d. B. BNCros?, -who travels In Virginia and otheKSouthern 8tate?, was taken suddenly aad severely 111 with collo. At the ant sh^re he came to the mer chant recommended Chamberlain'* Collo, Cholera anSsDlarrhoea Remedy. Two dose* of it cuxed him. No on? should leave home on a'Journey with out a bottle of this preparation. For Ml* by All Deal**. Planing Farm Work Ahead. As this Is read the active season so far as the production of oar staple crops 1b concerned, will be drawing to a close. It Is true that some cultiva tion still remains to tge done; but at most the farmer can do little more henceforth toward making the crop. If Uie present outlook Is pooi;, if stands are bad, and If unfavorable weather conditions appear to have cut yields, we believe In many cases the trouble may largely be attributed to a lack of vegetable matter?humus?in the land and to a lack of adequate pre paration. Now that the less strenuous days are here and we have some time to look about u? and plan the ne*t year'qi work, -the progressive farmer will begin to seek some way of avoid ing a repetition of the losses sus tained this year. ? Right now one of the most profit able bits of planning any farmer can do la to arrange to plant some clover this fall. If a small patch was grown last year the acreage this fall should be increased, and if none has hlthertb been grown, by all means a small patch should be planted. Bear In mind that here we have reference particu larly to bur and crimson clovers, two great winter soil builders that have proved ^ucces^it on practically every well drained soil type. In the South. We tvant to emphasize , too, the im portance of geting clover seed early, as It seems almost certain now that the demand will far outran the supply. We are here emphasizing this mat ter of a cover crop of clover because as we- have often said before, It Is on ly the farmer with a rich, clover-cov ered, humus filled soil that Is ever to meke anything farming. These covet crops offer such a cheap and splendid means of filling the soil with fertility that we believe no man Is realizing' on his opportunities who falls to , grow them.. Set In touch with reliable growers and dealers at once and pre pare to become a clover grower and soil builder?The Progressive Farmer. Has Tonr Child Worms I Most ohlldren do. A Coated .Purred Tongue; Strongs Breath; Stomach Pains; Circles under Eyes; Pale, Sal low Complexion; Nervous, Fretful; Grinding of Teeth; Tossing In Sleep; Peculiar Dreams?any one of these in dicate Child haa Wonms. Get a box of Klckapoo Worm Killer at once. 'It kills the Worms?the cans* of your child's condition. I? Laxative and aids Nature to expel the Worms. Supplied fls that his wife? H"m?she's not v<#y distinguished:" "No, but very easy to distinguish:" ??Pele Mele: " Employer?Not afraid of early hoars, I suppose? Young man-^You cknt close too early for me, sir?AnswejB: , 1.. LABORATORY SWAMPED. More Orders For Anti-Typhoid Vac cine Than Can Be Filled The State Laboratory of Hygelne Is up to Its neck witli orders (or anti typhoid vaccine. Everybody Beems to want to be Immunized against typhoid. The laboratory people haven't-time Just now to even count up the. number ot treatments sent out, but they esti mate that It averages about 9,000 doses a week, or enough to Immunize about 3,000 people every week. Within another week they hope to catch up with their orders, and after that they will be 'able to fill all requests the same (lay or the day after they are received. The vaccine is sent out free of charge. The only condition being that people who want to be immunized have their family physician or healtu officer order the vaccine. The Labora tory will not send the vaccine to a lay man, because it has to be injected un der the skin and the layman hs^g no means of administering It. While requests for vaccine pour in from every part of the State, there appears to be recortfVJjreaklng dem ands for it in counties having whole time health officers. These men are using it in .hundreds lots. Here is a part Of a letter sent the State Board of Health fromtr. Washburn, health officer of Nash County. / j "My anti-typhoid campaign layab out to get the best of me. People are doming in from all sides, and the work has been heavy. The biggest day I have had was last week at Spring Hope. 387 were vaccinated and prob ably 250 more turned away because the vaccine gave out I never had a hookworm campaign in which so much Interest was shown." Administering the vaccine is pract lc$.lly painles8., It does not hurt nearly so much as being Btruck with a-needle or pin. No open or running sore results as in the case of small pox vaccine. A slight swelling usual ly occurs, and som$ sorene?B and tenderness, bnt-these begin to snbslds after twelve or fifteen hours and dis appear In from thirty-six to forty eight hours*--Moderate headache oc curs In about one person out of twen ty, and in rare Instances, one per cent or less, tljls symptom Is quite severe. No serious results have ever occur red either Id this State or In the hun dreds of thousands of cases In the army or navy. Three applications about a week or ten days apart are necessary to produce immunity. As to efficiency, it may be said that in the army where statistics are available anti-typhoid vaccination has reduced the typhoid case" rate to less than one per cent of what It was prior to vaccination, and the typhoid death rate was entirely abolished last year. The' length of immunity conferred by the vaccine is not known, but It is thought to be at least four years. At least It Is well worth one's trouble to be vaccinated when we recall that 1,200 North Carolinians died of ty phold last year and about 15,000 were sick for several weeks with heavy loss from doctor's bills and other expenses. Wood's Trade Mark Crimson Clover Is Best Quality Obtainable, of High Tested Germina tion and Purity. Crimson Closer is a wonderful Boil improver; also makes splendid fall, winter and spring grazing, the earliest green feed, or ?good hay crop. A crop of CrimBon Clover turned under is equal to a good application of stable manure, and ita value as a soil-improver is worth $20. to $30: per acre. Wood's Descriptive Fall Catalog giving fall information about CRIMSON CLOVE*. ALFALFA, WINTER VETCH, and all FARM and GARDEN SKED-3 for Fall sowing, mailed on roqueet. Write for Catalog and price? of any Seeda required. T. W. WOOD Cf SONS. Seedsmen, ? Richmond, Va. Rockefeller will live long in the memory of meh. So will the bedbug. Graft Is becoming so common we will have to coin another word for it. : * - ? Have Yon Ponltry WHSiPwpiiS Daa TVa stock a poultry 1AW , medicine It'* a Liver MedJdae. Abo a atraajratiig Toole. d and chicken Pvnfl.0ldi ISc, ooc nd $1. per cam. MAKES YOU FORGET YOUR STOMACH ' Ever eat a meal cooked"from pnouGrocerlps? And did your poor- ^ . Stomach Rebel? Then get the right kind of Grofceries and you will for get you haveta stomach. ~~? \ We have 'em," and they are just waiting for an opportunity to v "tone up" your overburdened stomach. / t JONES MACON. Louisburg, N. C. They can be laid right over an old wood-shingle roof with oat dirt or bother, and they make it stormproof and fireproof. They're inexpensive. For particulars address M. FBANK HOCCK, L0CI8BURG N. C. Four|Years Old We have bought the entire stock of pure ap ple Vinegar 4 years old of M. T. Howell. See us for nome cured meat of all kinds. Oats/Ccrn, Hay, Flour, etc*. ' A. W. Perry, Jr. & Co. LOUISBURG, N. C. PAVEMENTS BS rrrrjji IS We do everything in Cement or Concrete work rCRRO CONCRETE COrtSTRUCTIOrt GO. Louisburg, N. C. A Posta?will bring our representative FLOORS BRIDGES RETALNLNG WALLS THE DEVIL LOVES A BALKY AUTOMOBILE D F O R S A k It produces annoyance, perturbation, exasperation; and unlimited damnation. ? Better let us examine your car in time, -1 betore the inevitable break comes. It is cheaper now than later. \ \ . ? '* > - . v.- ,i ? We'make all kinds of repairs, and sell tires and accessories. : . v. LOUISBURG MACHINE WORKS PHONE 43" Louisburg, N. C.